Bronze figure of Nike, goddess of victory

Greek, around 550 BC
Made in southern Italy, perhaps at Taranto

Probably from a large bowl

Nike is shown here running forwards. Her right foot is placed
delicately on a rising scroll, which is probably part of a plinth
attached to a large bronze vessel. The figure may have been part of
a series that ran around the rim of a large krater or
bowl. The goddess' intricately worked feathery wings are
outstretched in a wide arc, enhancing her swift movement. As she
runs, her long tresses sweep backwards across her chin and over her
left shoulder. Her left hand pulls gently at the folds of her
garment while her right is fully extended. She holds an object,
which has not been identified.

The south Italian Greeks were skilled bronze workers and
although very few large-scale bronze figures survive from this
region, there are many small-scale figures. These were cast either
as individual statuettes or as supports for mirrors or decorative
elements on vessels.

H.B. Walters, Catalogue of bronzes, Greek, R (London, 1899)

L. Burn, The British Museum book of G-1, revised edition (London, The British Museum Press, 1999)